Showing posts with label synergetics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label synergetics. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 November 2016

Environment WorldGame (1991)

The following was a report I'd published online shortly after attending the Ottawa Carleton Pugwash WorldGame event in 1991 -- I attended this with my oldest son, Linton, who was 7 years old at the time (who says kids can't do thinktank exercises!) The report was formatted crudely through an online LaTeX converter just so I could throw this out there for anyone who may be interested.

Environment WorldGame


<articleinfo>
<title>Environment WorldGame™ </title>
<authorgroup>Carleton University/Pugwash</authorgroup>
March 16, 1991

</articleinfo>


News of this WorldGame came nonchalantly over electronic news:
>From mag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Wed Mar 6 15:51:58 1991
	From: mag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Michael Gifford)
	Newsgroups: ott.general
	Subject: The Environmental World Game
	Summary: Student Simulation Game at Baker Hall, Carleton U
	Keywords: Pugwash, simulation, world, Student, Baker Hall
	Date: 6 Mar 91 05:03:08 GMT
	Distribution: Ottawa
	Organization: Sandelman Software, Debugging Department, Ottawa

	Hi

	The Canadian Student Pugwash is sponsoring an event at
	Baker Hall, Carleton U, within a National Conference. This
	part of the conference is free and open to students here in
	Ottawa.

	A 3 to 4 hour simulation with 100 to 300 people, played on
	a 40x70 foot world map. Participants will engage in actions
	that help them learn about the environment. Its problems,
	options, and interconnections from a global and local
	perspective. Durring the game, players are given the power and
	opportunity to solve the world's problems as well as create the
	kind of world that they want to live in. Because participants
	learn about the environment from an active and empowered
	perspective, the game serves as a testing ground for later
	action by individuals and groups.

	As a participatory event, the Environmental World Game has
	been designed to put players in charge of the world. The event
	is not an academic exercise, but rather about changing the
	world.

	1:30 to 5:00 Saturday, March 16th
	Baker Hall, Carleton University.
	For more info either reply to this letter, respond
	to my email address, or call
	Mike Gifford @ 563 - 0176
	or Canadian Student Pugwash @ 234 - 3622
	--
	Mike Gifford -- 2nd year Integrated Science Studies..
	** -- I am normal.. And everyone else is wierd..
	/ -- Mike_Gifford@xxxxxxxxx/mag@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
	\_/ -- attending Carleton University, in Ottawa..

  

With the new moon overhead in Pisces, Linton and I made our may from our drop-off point, through the maze of campus tunnels to a canvas-walled room in the Carlton Unicenter where we filed in with about a hundred others. At the door, we were issued with a stats chart for North America, 1970, the two of us representing three fifths the total population, 6% of the world total.

Wednesday, 3 December 2008

A Letter to the Leaders

A Letter to the Leaders of the Four Federal Political Parties: "I encourage you not to back down on forming a collaborative government via a coalition (please pay close attention to that wording - collaborative government). Equally, however, I encourage you to extend an olive branch to Mr. Harper, to enable his active participation in developing the economic strategy for this country, assuming he is willing to truly collaborate. ... A true collaboration invites those who can bring diverse contexts into an environment of active and dialogic engagement. The process is far more complex than debate"
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world...

You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one.


After reading Mark's letter on Collaborative Government, I was reminded of my own short paper on applying re-evolutionary industrial organizational theory to our local municipal stalemate. Do I spot a trend here? Like the money-system, perhaps the party-system is similarly racing to a spontaneous re-birthing?